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Chair for Dali by Kei Harada

Japanese designer Kei Harada has created two chairs made completely out of rubber.

Harada based the project on a Surrealist image by American portrait photographer Philippe Halsman called Dali Atomicus, which illustrates a silhouetted chair crashing towards a chaotic scene that includes flying cats, a bucket of water and the artist Salvador Dali suspended in mid-air.

The designer told Dezeen, "If I could change one thing about the photograph, I would transform the chair into a rubber one; by doing so, I could add a little ease to the photograph because a rubber chair would inflict less damage to the floor, walls, and the chair itself."

The elastic material provides a more malleable chair, so the back and legs bend in response to the sitter's posture.

There are two seats in the Chair for Dali series: one chair has a square back rest and is made of rubber with 70% hardness whilst the other has a rounded back and is made of rubber with 90% hardness, making the leg bracing unnecessary.

Above: Dali Atomicus by Philippe Halsman

Other rubber furniture we've featured include Thomas Schnur's table with plungers for feet and a stool made from recycled rubber.

Chair photographs are by Kazutaka Fujimoto.

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